
You'll need to disable that add-on in order to use GameFAQs.Īre you browsing GameFAQs from work, school, a library, or another shared IP? Unfortunately, if this school or place of business doesn't stop people from abusing our resources, we don't have any other way to put an end to it. When we get more abuse from a single IP address than we do legitimate traffic, we really have no choice but to block it. If you don't think you did anything wrong and don't understand why your IP was banned.Īre you using a proxy server or running a browser add-on for "privacy", "being anonymous", or "changing your region" or to view country-specific content, such as Tor or Zenmate? Unfortunately, so do spammers and hackers. IP bans will be reconsidered on a case-by-case basis if you were running a bot and did not understand the consequences, but typically not for spamming, hacking, or other abuse. If you are responsible for one of the above issues.

Running a web bot/spider that downloaded a very large number of pages - more than could possibly justified as "personal use".Automated spam (advertising) or intrustion attempts (hacking).Impressive.Your current IP address has been blocked due to bad behavior, which generally means one of the following: It turns out it developed along very similar lines. After using our mounted knights to shred William Wallace’s archer screen, and our bowmen to break up his four hedgehogs of schiltrom-ing spearmen, we went to Wiki to read about the real engagement. While the venue has a slightly stylised RTS feel and the troop numbers are distorted to guarantee challenge, the terrain, army compositions and positions all echo the events of July 22, 1298. Take the Battle of Falkirk for example (episode 2, English campaign). To call any of the scenarios simulations would be to misuse the word, but the designers have plainly done some homework.


You don’t need to complete a campaign to unlock a new one, but you do need to win a few fights to access bonus battles such as Stirling, Worringen and Campaldino. Medieval II didn’t provide much in the way of reenactments what were there - half a dozen? Here there are 25 of the things, arranged, rather unimaginatively, in five nation-themed sequences. While XIII Century: Death or Glory’s approach, interface and units are all incredibly familiar, the AI and choice of historical scraps give the game sufficient personality to survive the inevitable unflattering comparisons. Just the stuff we’ve seen and savoured a hundred times before? Yes and no. Just choppy seas of armoured aggro, wedges of galloping lancers plunging into rectangles of spiky spearmen, knots of stout swordsmen cowering under shields as showers of arrows fall.
